Around financial markets, the conventional wisdom is to “let the trend be your friend.” What happens in the market on one day will also likely occur on the following.

Investors, the theory goes, should ride the “trend” until it “bends,” then bail out.

The phrase sums up the southern border crisis. The invasion continues seamlessly one day after another, and during 2023 has steadily ramped upp to a record number of migrant crossings with a December seven-day average of more than 9,600, a Homeland Security Department official told CNN.

The record-smashing figure represents the average across the nation’s entire southern border.

In November, total encounters stood at 6,800, meaning that the southern border has seen a month-over-month influx of 3,000 more daily arrivals as migrants continue to pour through the border.

In fiscal year 2023, according to Customs and Border Protection officials, more than 2.4 million encounters were recorded at the southern border with more than 3.2 million encounters nationwide.

During the current fiscal year, 169 individuals on the terrorist watchlist were apprehended attempting to enter the country illegally, and at least 1.7 million known gotaways have evaded apprehension since fiscal year 2021.

Since President Joe Biden took office, there have been 7.5 million encounters nationwide and 6.2 million encounters at the southern border, in addition to 1.7 million known gotaways.

Also in fiscal year 2023, CBP arrested 35,433 aliens with criminal convictions or outstanding warrants, including 598 known gang members, 178 of those being MS-13 members.

The CBP, including its Air and Marine Operations, also seized enough fentanyl coming across the southern border to kill about 6 billion people, according to House Homeland Security Committee estimates.

The data are included in the committee’s fiscal year-end report titled “Startling Stats,” but its findings did nothing to influence the Biden administration to end the invasion. Not only did the illegal alien influx remain steady, it accelerated unabated.

If the House’s year-end summary had no effect on the Biden administration’s mismanagement of the border disaster, nothing will.

Proof that the border crisis will continue unchecked: in December, CBP processed and released 302,000 aliens. Since the start of fiscal year 2024, which began Oct. 1, 20023, CBP has encountered more than 785,000 aliens at the southern border alone.

As alarming as the raw CBP statistics that related to the multimillions of border encounters are, they understate the invasion’s inevitable consequences.

Factor in chain migration and the certainty that arriving aliens will either start new families or grow their existing ones, and population growth will continue upward.

Citizens who live in high-density cities should brace for more overcrowding driven by Biden and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas’ criminal disregard of federal immigration laws. 

A Center for Immigration Studies analysis detailed that the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey showed that the total foreign-born or immigrant population, both legal and illegal, was 49.5 million in October 2023 — a 4.5 million increase since Biden’s inauguration and a new record high.

At 15%, the foreign-born share of the U.S. population is the highest percentage recorded in U.S. history.

Since Biden took office, the foreign-born population has grown on average by 137,000 a month, compared to 42,000 a month during President Donald Trump’s one term, and 68,000 a month during President Barack Obama’s two.

These unsustainable population increases generate urban sprawl and drain already diminishing natural resources like water and farm acreage.

Creating an equitable immigration system under Biden that benefits citizens and migrants alike is a long shot, but still possible. Congress returns from its winter recess on Jan. 8, and will resume discussions over numerous thorny issues.

At the top of House Republicans’ to-do list is, before authorizing funding for Ukraine and Israel wars, to demand that the immigration provisions encompassed in HR-2, which it passed in May, must be included.

Key among those provisions is mandatory E-Verify, which would end the jobs magnet that lures thousands of foreign nationals to the United States with employment expectations and to curb the Biden administration’s parole abuse. Parole is intended for extraordinary circumstances, usually granted to one individual, and not intended to be given out en masse.

HR-2 represents the best chance that lawmakers have to restore operational control of the border. Otherwise, the invasion will continue until at least January 2025.

Based on the latest CBP monthly statistics, without HR-2 another 3 million illegal aliens will cross during the 2025 calendar year.

Joe Guzzardi is an Institute for Sound Public Policy analyst who has written about immigration for more than 30 years. A California native who now lives in Pittsburgh, he can be reached at jguzzardi@ifspp.org. The opinions expressed are his own.